Friday, July 10Th, 2020 TO: Interested Parties FROM: Reed Galen RE: State of the Race “Over These Next 11 Months, Our Efforts

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Friday, July 10Th, 2020 TO: Interested Parties FROM: Reed Galen RE: State of the Race “Over These Next 11 Months, Our Efforts Friday, July 10th, 2020 TO: Interested Parties FROM: Reed Galen RE: State of the Race “Over these next 11 months, our efforts will be dedicated to defeating President Trump and Trumpism at the ballot box and to elect those patriots who will hold the line. We do not undertake this task lightly, nor from ideological preference. We have been, and remain, broadly conservative (or classically liberal) in our politics and outlooks. Our many policy differences with national Democrats remain, but our shared fidelity to the Constitution dictates a common effort.” The Lincoln Project The New York Times December 17, 2019 The Lincoln Project launched six months ago in a different time and place in America. The country was preparing to experience its third impeachment trial in the history of the United States. The impeachment of President Donald J. Trump for abuse of power ended in political farce as Mitch McConnell and his supine Senate majority looked away from the clear evidence that President Trump had extorted a foreign government to assist his re-election. It is in that context, and the previous three years of Trump’s administration that The Lincoln Project began its efforts with a clear message: To rid American politics of Donald Trump and Trumpism in the November general election. At that moment, saving the Republic from the worst of Trump’s behavior was paramount. That goal was ambitious, but we knew even then that it would be an uphill fight. As the coronavirus made its way to our shores, Donald Trump’s inability to lead changed our outlook on how to conduct our efforts against him. As we learned – along with a horrified America – that Trump was repeatedly warned by the intelligence and public health communities that an immediate, swift and comprehensive response was necessary to stem its spread, he did nothing. He delayed. He deceived the American people about the scope and severity of the disease. He didn’t listen to experts, and his failures have led America into a medical and economic calamity. We now know the all-too- awful consequences of Trump’s failure to perform the duties of the presidency. With COVID-19 spiking across the country and thousands of Americans dying daily, it further crystallized The Lincoln Project’s mission: Political choices have consequences. In the case of the coronavirus, they were life-and-death consequences for American families and for the economy. Trump’s defeat at the ballot box in November is about much more than simply who controls the levers of government. America’s decision this fall will be an indication of whether we care about our fellow citizens, and whether the American experiment deserves to continue. George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police officers put the racial tensions in America into stark relief. Hundreds of thousands of mostly peaceful demonstrators took to the streets. Organizations such as the US Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and NASCAR banned the Confederate Flag. A long-overdue reckoning on race is underway. Trump’s response? Division, violence, real and threatened against peaceful Americans, and the language of George Wallace and Bull Connor. When we witnessed a President willing to gas, beat, and deploy stun grenades against unarmed protesters to engineer a pathetic photo-op, it was clear this was no longer a simple political challenge; it was a moral challenge. The events that began with Mr. Floyd’s killing continue today. They also further distilled for The Lincoln Project the nature of the fight we’re in this year. Politically, this race would always be a binary choice between a Republican and a Democrat. It’s also a binary choice between the forces of darkness and light, right and wrong. Ultimately, it’s America or Trump. If the polling we see at both the national and state-by-state levels is to be believed, with all the attendant disclaimers, Donald Trump finds himself in an increasingly difficult position to win reelection this November. For all that he has fallen in the polls, Donald Trump is a dangerous candidate in the most powerful office in the land; our work, and the work of allied groups in this fight is far from over, and the months ahead will require the full measure from all of us. 2016 should remain a stark lesson; it’s not over until Joe Biden puts his hand on the Bible and swears the oath of office. The three crises we face today: COVID-19, massive unemployment, and racial unrest must all be laid at Trump’s feet. He has personally refused to respond to or mitigate any of them. Instead, his behavior and actions have led to further infection and death, millions more Americans out of work, and racial tensions at a pitch not seen in decades. Key Issues The Lincoln Project will focus its efforts on the following issues during the remainder of the campaign: ● COVID-19: Trump’s failure to respond has cost more than 130,000 Americans their lives and three million more are currently infected; ● The Economy: Tens of millions of Americans are out of work and the number will grow as infection rates spike and states and cities are forced to shut down again; ● Unity vs. Division: We are in unprecedented times. The most divisive President in American history will seek to weaponize race, ethnicity, and class tensions for political gain. ● Competence, corruption, and character: Trump lacks both, and voters who were sold the reality-show image of Trump in 2016 will be starkly disabused of those illusions. Trump’s abuse of power, corruption, and lawlessness will strike an ugly chord with voters in a struggling economy. ● The Validity of the 2020 Race: Trump has already begun his attempts to call into question the legitimacy of an election he is likely to lose badly. We will not allow him to make this charge, and must beat him so decisively that he doesn’t have a legal or messaging leg to stand on. ● Election Security and Voter Rights/Voter Access: We believe that any American citizen who wants to cast a ballot should be able to do so safely. We will take substantive action to ensure that any and all voters who are able to apply for absentee ballots have the information and opportunity to do so; ● A Season of Surrender: Trump is unable to contend with any issue, large or small. Instead, he surrenders the nation to its fate as he takes to Twitter to express his grievances and sow further division. The Presidency As noted above, Donald Trump is trailing former Vice President Joe Biden by double digits in every national survey. Trump is well behind in most, if not all the so-called target states. Worse for him, in traditionally Republican states such as Iowa, Texas, and Georgia, Trump finds himself within the margin of error. Despite the Trump campaign reserving more than $100 million in television advertising for the Labor Day – Election Day stretch, his campaign is currently advertising in such places as Texas, Georgia, and the Panhandle of Florida. This is not the strategy of a campaign that sees itself in the ascendant, but one that knows that its base is softening, perhaps beyond repair. Trump’s decision to make this election about racial division should come as no surprise. Resentment and division were how he began his campaign five years ago, and they will be the reason his presidency ends next January 20th. However, this does not imply complacency. This race will tighten before November as voters turn their attention to the election before them. The press will write stories about “the Trump comeback,” Democrats will panic, and Republicans will crow about how they know the country best. As of this week, The Lincoln Project believes that: ● Michigan is now all but lost to Trump. This puts a severe dent in his Upper Midwest strategy; ● Wisconsin and Pennsylvania are leaning heavily toward Biden as independents and soft Republicans move away from the president; ● Arizona is increasingly likely to go to Biden in November as a large Latino population makes its voice heard. The Democrats also have a very strong US Senate candidate in Mark Kelly, who may convince voters to cross the line; ● North Carolina is critical to this November’s outcome. 2016’s margin of 150,000 votes will likely be even narrower this fall; ● Republican stalwarts like Ohio and Florida will require far more time, money, and attention from Trump and his campaign if they want to ensure victory in November. The United States Senate The Lincoln Project pledged to remove not simply Donald Trump, but the scourge of his nationalist populist movement – Trumpism --from American politics. Republicans in the United States Senate have been the exemplars of Trumpism during the last three and a half years. Terrified of a mean tweet or a demeaning nickname, Republican senators, with the lone exceptionof Mitt Romney, have toed Trump’s line, regardless of the circumstance. In January, these senators, sporting Cheshire Cat grins, could not get to the cameras and microphones fast enough to downplay the evidence against the president and stand strong by his side, despite his actions against a small, allied nation living under the constant threat of Russian aggression. Today, however, the cats seem to have their tongues. Regardless of the circumstance: the failed federal response to Covid-19, Trump’s racial arson, or the recent revelations that Russian security services offered bounties for dead American soldiers and Marines, not one of them will take him to the task. It is now accepted in political circles and among many in the media that the Republican members of the Senate are mere "hostages" to Donald Trump and Trumpism.
Recommended publications
  • Trumpism on College Campuses
    UC San Diego UC San Diego Previously Published Works Title Trumpism on College Campuses Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1d51s5hk Journal QUALITATIVE SOCIOLOGY, 43(2) ISSN 0162-0436 Authors Kidder, Jeffrey L Binder, Amy J Publication Date 2020-06-01 DOI 10.1007/s11133-020-09446-z Peer reviewed eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Qualitative Sociology (2020) 43:145–163 https://doi.org/10.1007/s11133-020-09446-z Trumpism on College Campuses Jeffrey L. Kidder1 & Amy J. Binder 2 Published online: 1 February 2020 # Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2020 Abstract In this paper, we report data from interviews with members of conservative political clubs at four flagship public universities. First, we categorize these students into three analytically distinct orientations regarding Donald Trump and his presidency (or what we call Trumpism). There are principled rejecters, true believers, and satisficed partisans. We argue that Trumpism is a disunifying symbol in our respondents’ self- narratives. Specifically, right-leaning collegians use Trumpism to draw distinctions over the appropriate meaning of conservatism. Second, we show how political clubs sort and shape orientations to Trumpism. As such, our work reveals how student-led groups can play a significant role in making different political discourses available on campuses and shaping the types of activism pursued by club members—both of which have potentially serious implications for the content and character of American democracy moving forward. Keywords Americanpolitics.Conservatism.Culture.Highereducation.Identity.Organizations Introduction Donald Trump, first as a candidate and now as the president, has been an exceptionally divisive force in American politics, even among conservatives who typically vote Republican.
    [Show full text]
  • Opinion Talk Radio Is Turning Million...Nto Conservatives
    https://nyti.ms/2SFJqYc Talk Radio Is Turning Millions of Americans Into Conservatives The medium is at the heart of Trumpism. By Paul Matzko Dr. Matzko is the author of “The Radio Right: How a Band of Broadcasters Took on the Federal Government and Built the Modern Conservative Movement.” Oct. 9, 2020 At least 15 million Americans every week tune into one of the top 15 talk radio programs. They are not monolithically conservative, but they are overwhelmingly so. A dozen of the top 15 shows feature conservative or libertarian hosts — with devoted followings like Rush Limbaugh’s “Dittoheads” or Michael Savage’s “Savage Nation” — and only one leans left. Talk radio may face an aging audience, a decline in ad revenue and competition from new mass media forms like podcasts, but there are still millions of Americans whose politics are shaped by what they listen to on talk radio all day, every day. Fox News gets more of the attention for shaping conservative opinion and for its influence on the Trump administration, but we shouldn’t overlook the power of conservative talk radio. The conservatism of talk radio only partly overlaps with institutional conservatism, that of right-wing Washington think tanks, magazines and the Republican Party itself. By the early 2000s, it had embraced a version of conservatism that is less focused on free markets and small government and more focused on ethnonationalism and populism. It is, in short, the core of Trumpism — now and in the future, with or without a President Trump. Talk radio’s power is rooted in the sheer volume of content being produced each week.
    [Show full text]
  • Voter Purges
    ANALYSIS Voter Purges: the Risks in 2018 by Jonathan Brater† Introduction state sent county clerks the names of more than 50,000 people who were supposedly ineligible Voter purges — the often controversial practice to vote because of felony convictions. Those of removing voters from registration lists in or- county clerks began to remove voters without der to keep them up to date — are poised to be any notice. The state later discovered the purge one of the biggest threats to the ballot in 2018. list was riddled with errors: It included at least Activist groups and some state officials have 4,000 people who did not have felony convic- mounted alarming campaigns to purge voters tions.1 And among those on the list who once without adequate safeguards. If successful, these had a disqualifying conviction, up to 60 percent efforts could lead to a massive number of eligi- of those individuals were Americans who were ble, registered voters losing their right to cast a eligible to vote because they had their voting ballot this fall. rights restored back to them.2 Properly done, efforts to clean up voter rolls are The Arkansas incident also illustrates the important for election integrity and efficiency. confusion arising from many state laws that Done carelessly or hastily, such efforts are prone disenfranchise persons with past criminal to error, the effects of which are borne by vot- convictions. Nationally, more than 6 million ers who may show up to vote only to find their Americans cannot vote because of a past fel- names missing from the list.
    [Show full text]
  • Download File
    Tow Center for Digital Journalism CONSERVATIVE A Tow/Knight Report NEWSWORK A Report on the Values and Practices of Online Journalists on the Right Anthony Nadler, A.J. Bauer, and Magda Konieczna Funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. Table of Contents Executive Summary 3 Introduction 7 Boundaries and Tensions Within the Online Conservative News Field 15 Training, Standards, and Practices 41 Columbia Journalism School Conservative Newswork 3 Executive Summary Through much of the 20th century, the U.S. news diet was dominated by journalism outlets that professed to operate according to principles of objectivity and nonpartisan balance. Today, news outlets that openly proclaim a political perspective — conservative, progressive, centrist, or otherwise — are more central to American life than at any time since the first journalism schools opened their doors. Conservative audiences, in particular, express far less trust in mainstream news media than do their liberal counterparts. These divides have contributed to concerns of a “post-truth” age and fanned fears that members of opposing parties no longer agree on basic facts, let alone how to report and interpret the news of the day in a credible fashion. Renewed popularity and commercial viability of openly partisan media in the United States can be traced back to the rise of conservative talk radio in the late 1980s, but the expansion of partisan news outlets has accelerated most rapidly online. This expansion has coincided with debates within many digital newsrooms. Should the ideals journalists adopted in the 20th century be preserved in a digital news landscape? Or must today’s news workers forge new relationships with their publics and find alternatives to traditional notions of journalistic objectivity, fairness, and balance? Despite the centrality of these questions to digital newsrooms, little research on “innovation in journalism” or the “future of news” has explicitly addressed how digital journalists and editors in partisan news organizations are rethinking norms.
    [Show full text]
  • “Offensive and Unconstitutional”
    1 “Offensive and Unconstitutional” Legal and political strategies for defeating President Trump’s Muslim immigration ban2 COPY NOT By XXXXXXXXX DO Harvard Law School Class of 2017 1 Vice President Mike Pence responding to President Trump’s call for a ban on Muslim immigration, quoted by Madeline Conway, Trump stokes fears he’ll pursue Muslim ban, POLITICO (Dec. 22, 2016), http://www.politico.com/story/2016/12/trump-muslim-ban-kellyanne-conway-232912. 2 Photo courtesy of circa.com Table of Contents FORWARD ............................................................................................................................................................... 2 I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND ......................................................................................................... 4 II. A PURE ENTRY BAN ON ALL MUSLIMS ..................................................................................................... 7 A. IMMIGRATION AND THE CONSTITUTION: THE PLENARY POWER DOCTRINE ............................................................ 9 B. LITIGATION STRATEGY #1: ATTACK THE PLENARY POWER DOCTRINE ................................................................. 10 C. LITIGATION STRATEGY 2: FIRST AMENDMENT ESTABLISHMENT CLAUSE CLAIMS .............................................. 12 1. Possible Ruling #1: The Establishment Clause Stops at the Border ........................................................ 13 2. Possible Ruling #2: Strict Scrutiny Applies but the Government Meets Its Burden .........................
    [Show full text]
  • Flawed from the Start the Presidential Commission on Election Integrity
    Flawed from the Start The Presidential Commission on Election Integrity September 2017 Flawed from the Start The Presidential Commission on Election Integrity September 2017 Acknowledgements Generous support for this report was provided in part by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Democracy Fund, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Wallace Global Fund, the Bullitt Foundation, and the Normandie Foundation. The authors, Allegra Chapman, Director of Voting and Senior Counsel, and Stephen Spaulding, Chief of Strat- egy and External Affairs, gratefully acknowledge the help of Common Cause Education Fund President Karen Hobert Flynn for oversight and recommendations; Vice President for Communications Scott Swenson for guidance on the project; Dale Eisman, Senior Writer/Editor, for thorough editing, and Kerstin Diehn, of KV Design, for layout. Any mistakes are our own. Foreword by Karen Hobert Flynn, President of Common Cause For nearly five decades, Common Cause has been at the forefront of the fight for a democracy that works for every- one. No matter who is in office, of whatever party, we hold them accountable by empowering citizen participation and engagement. When we first heard President Trump make irresponsible, unfounded claims that “three to five million illegal votes” were cast in his election, we were prepared for the possibility that he would follow up with unjust – and perhaps illegal – action to deprive millions of qualified Americans of their right to vote. Months later, when he created his Presidential Commission on Election Integrity (PCEI), we were not surprised to see him stack it with a number of individuals well-known for crafting policies designed to take voters off the rolls and make voting more difficult for those who remain.
    [Show full text]
  • Secretary of State Alex Padilla Responds to Presidential Election Commission Request for Personal Data of California Voters
    AP16:042 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 29, 2017 CONTACT: Jesse Melgar or Sam Mahood (916) 653-6575 Secretary of State Alex Padilla Responds to Presidential Election Commission Request for Personal Data of California Voters SACRAMENTO – California Secretary of State Alex Padilla today released the statement below in response to a letter from Kris Kobach, Vice Chair of the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity. The Commission was established through executive order by President Donald Trump after he lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton in the 2016 Presidential Election. Because he lost the popular vote, Trump has falsely alleged that three to five million votes were cast illegally in the 2016 election. This, despite the fact that his claims of voter fraud are unsubstantiated and that academics and bipartisan leaders have confirmed that there is no evidence of large scale, let alone massive voter fraud. California Secretary of State Alex Padilla issued the following statement in response to Mr. Kobach's request for voter data: “The President's commission has requested the personal data and the voting history of every American voter–including Californians. As Secretary of State, it is my duty to ensure the integrity of our elections and to protect the voting rights and privacy of our state's voters. I will not provide sensitive voter information to a commission that has already inaccurately passed judgment that millions of Californians voted illegally. California's participation would only serve to legitimize the false and already debunked claims of massive voter fraud made by the President, the Vice President, and Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • The Brookings Institution the Current: Will New Documents Sway the Supreme Court on Census Citizenship Question? June 3, 2019 PA
    The Brookings Institution The Current: Will new documents sway the Supreme Court on Census citizenship question? June 3, 2019 PARTICIPANTS: Host: Adrianna Pita, Office of Communications, Brookings Guest: Alan Berube, Senior Fellow and Deputy Director, Metropolitan Policy Program, Brookings * * * * * (MUSIC) PITA: You are listening to “The Current” from the Brookings Podcast Network. With us today is Alan Berube, senior fellow and deputy director of the Metropolitan Policy Program here at Brookings. The Trump administration's push to add a citizenship question to the 2020 Census is currently under review by the Supreme Court. New documents submitted to the court suggest that this move was highly influenced by Republican redistricting strategist, aware that including the citizenship question would lead to undercounting in Latino and Democratic districts. Alan, what can you tell us about this new information that was uncovered and what this information says about the citizenship question? BERUBE: So, as you just related, Adrianna, this is really just the latest revelation in what's been a long running battle between the Trump administration and a wide range of other parties on adding this so- called citizenship question to the 2020 Census. In April, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a case challenging the constitutionality of asking all respondents to the census whether they are citizens of the United States. And all along, the administration had asserted its authority to add this question -- in particular, claiming that the data from the census on citizenship is essential information for enforcing the Voting Rights Act. This was actually happening despite some evidence that former White House adviser Steve Bannon and Kris Kobach -- a couple gentlemen not really known for their devotion to minority voting rights -- were really influential in convincing commerce secretary Wilbur Ross to add the question.
    [Show full text]
  • National Tracking Poll 2005100
    National Tracking Poll #2005100 May 22-26, 2020 Crosstabulation Results Methodology: This poll was conducted from May 22-26, 2020, among a national sample of 1986 Registered Voters. The interviews were conducted online and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of Registered Voters based on age, race/ethnicity, gender, educational attainment, and region. Results from the full survey have a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points. Table Index 1 Table P1: Now, generally speaking, would you say that things in the country are going in the right direction, or have they pretty seriously gotten off on the wrong track? .................. 8 2 Table P3: Now, thinking about your vote, what would you say is the top set of issues on your mind when you cast your vote for federal offices such as U.S. Senate or Congress? . 11 3 Table POL1: Thinking about the November 2020 general election for president, Congress, and statewide offices, how enthusiastic would you say you are in voting in this year’s election? . 15 4 Table POL2: Compared to previous elections, are you more or less enthusiastic about voting than usual? 18 5 Table POL3: And how important do you think the November 2020 general election for president, Congress, and statewide offices will be? .................................. 21 6 Table POL4: Based on what you’ve seen, read, or heard, who do you think will win the November 2020 presidential election? ............................................ 24 7 Table POL5_1: Who do you trust more to handle each of the following issues? The economy . 27 8 Table POL5_2: Who do you trust more to handle each of the following issues? Jobs .
    [Show full text]
  • Ruralorganizing.Org July 2020 - Battlegrounds Kansas Sample Sample Online Sample of 1,055 Voters fielded from June 30 to July 14, 2020
    RuralOrganizing.org July 2020 - Battlegrounds Kansas sample Sample Online sample of 1,055 voters fielded from June 30 to July 14, 2020. Margin of Error ±3.4% 1. Do you plan to vote in the November election for President, Congress, and other state and local offices? Yes, definitely . .89% Yes, probably . 5% Maybe (50-50) . 4% No, probably not . 1% No, definitely not . 1% Totals .................................................................................100% Weighted N . 1,054 2. How would you rate the job that Donald Trump is doing on each of the following? Strongly Somewhat Somewhat Strongly approve approve disapprove disapprove Don’t know Immigration and border security 38% 16% 10% 33% 2% Tax cuts 32% 19% 12% 29% 7% Trade deals 34% 21% 10% 29% 6% Environmental regulations 28% 18% 11% 36% 8% Nominating and confirming federal and Supreme Court judges 34% 19% 9% 30% 8% Jobs and the economy 41% 18% 11% 27% 3% Healthcare 24% 24% 13% 34% 6% The coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak 25% 23% 10% 40% 3% 3. How favorable are your feelings about each of the following public figures, groups, or programs? Somewhat Very Somewhat unfavor- Very unfa- favorable favorable Neutral able vorable Donald Trump 28% 20% 9% 8% 34% Joe Biden 14% 16% 15% 16% 39% Your members of Congress 7% 23% 30% 24% 16% State and local government officials 7% 32% 34% 19% 7% The United States Postal Service (USPS) 35% 35% 21% 7% 2% Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), or food stamps 21% 25% 32% 16% 6% 1 RuralOrganizing.org July 2020 - Battlegrounds Kansas sample Farmers and rachers 48% 32% 15% 3% 2% National media 8% 18% 20% 20% 35% Local media 10% 27% 29% 19% 14% The Democratic Party 13% 17% 17% 13% 40% The Republican Party 15% 27% 18% 17% 24% Black Lives Matter protesters 18% 17% 19% 14% 31% 4.
    [Show full text]
  • Kris Kobach: the Architect of Hate
    KRIS KOBACH: THE ARCHITECT OF HATE INTRODUCTION Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach has been a notorious member and architect of the anti-immigrant movement for the past fifteen years. Among the leadership roles that he plays is serving as legal counsel to a network of organizations founded by John Tanton, a white supremacist, and includes the Federation for American Immigration Reform, a designated hate group.1 In 2010, Kobach was elected Secretary of State in Kansas and re-elected in 2014. He holds the position today2 even while he continues to personally profit from advancing and defending policies aimed at severely restricting immigration in the United States. Kobach has drafted, advanced and defended some of the most offensive anti-immigrant laws and policies in the country. He has built his career trying to pass laws aimed at limiting the rights of immigrants, Muslims, and communities of color. His pattern looks something like this: he drafts a piece of anti-immigrant or anti-voting legislation and advocates for the bill’s passage. When a law is inevitably challenged in court, Kobach offers his private legal services to municipalities faced with defending the measure. As a result of pushing these unconstitutional measures forward, Kobach has collected close to a million in legal fees,3 while cities in several states have collectively spent more than 7 million in taxpayers’ dollars defending these laws.4 Not only has Kris Kobach worked assiduously to advance an anti-immigrant agenda, he has also recently focused his efforts on making it hard for people of color to vote.
    [Show full text]
  • Kansas Survey Results for 314 Action
    Kansas Survey Results for 314 Action Q 1 Do you approve or disapprove of President Q 5 I ’ d like to tell you a little bit about the Donald Trump ’ s job performance ? candidates for US Senate . Here ’ s the first one : 52 % Lifelong Kansan Barbara Bollier is a medical Approve . doctor running for U . S . Senate to help other Disapprove . 43 % people and fix what ’ s broken in Washington . 5 % Following her medical career , Doctor Bollier Not sure . now serves in the state Senate as a strong Q 2 If the election for US Senate were held today , advocate for public schools , affordable health would you vote for the Democratic candidate care , balanced budgets , and fiscal or the Republican candidate ? responsibility . Does hearing this make you Democratic candidate . 40 % much more likely , somewhat more likely , somewhat less likely or much less likely to Republican candidate . 50 % vote for Barbara Bollier , or does it not make a Not sure . 11 % difference ? Q 3 If the candidates for US Senate this November Much more likely . 27 % were Democrat Barbara Bollier and Republican Somewhat more likely . 22 % Kris Kobach , who would you vote for ? Somewhat less likely . 5 % Barbara Bollier . 44 % Much less likely . 10 % Kris Kobach . 42 % It doesn ' t make a difference . 29 % Not sure . 13 % 8 % Q 4 What is your largest concern with the Not sure . coronavirus - you and your family ’ s health and Q 6 Here ’ s the next one : A native of Topeka , well - being , or you and your family ’ s financial Kansas , Kris Kobach graduated from both situation ? Harvard University and Yale University Law 71 % School and is running for U .
    [Show full text]